Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica

In this work we study the dynamics of the surface-based temperature inversion over the Antarctic Plateau during the polar winter. Using 6 years of observations from the French–Italian Antarctic station Concordia at Dome C, we investigate sudden regime transitions in the strength of the near-surface...

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Published in:Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
Main Authors: Baas, P. (author), van de Wiel, B.J.H. (author), van Meijgaard, Erik (author), Vignon, Etienne (author), Genthon, Christophe (author), van der Linden, S.J.A. (author), de Roode, S.R. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:57303df6-f894-426d-8e9c-5ee4daff65a5
https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3450
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author Baas, P. (author)
van de Wiel, B.J.H. (author)
van Meijgaard, Erik (author)
Vignon, Etienne (author)
Genthon, Christophe (author)
van der Linden, S.J.A. (author)
de Roode, S.R. (author)
author_facet Baas, P. (author)
van de Wiel, B.J.H. (author)
van Meijgaard, Erik (author)
Vignon, Etienne (author)
Genthon, Christophe (author)
van der Linden, S.J.A. (author)
de Roode, S.R. (author)
author_sort Baas, P. (author)
collection Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository
container_issue 720
container_start_page 930
container_title Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
container_volume 145
description In this work we study the dynamics of the surface-based temperature inversion over the Antarctic Plateau during the polar winter. Using 6 years of observations from the French–Italian Antarctic station Concordia at Dome C, we investigate sudden regime transitions in the strength of the near-surface temperature inversion. Here we define “near-surface” as being within the domain of the 45-m measuring tower. In particular, we consider the strongly nonlinear relation between the 10-m inversion strength (T 10m – T s ) and the 10-m wind speed. To this end, all individual events for which the 10-m inversion strength increases or decreases continuously by more than 15 K in time are considered. Composite time series and vertical profiles of wind and temperature reveal specific characteristics of the transition from weak to very strong inversions and vice versa. In contrast to midlatitudes, the largest variations in temperature are not found at the surface but at a height of 10 m. A similar analysis was performed on results from an atmospheric single-column model (SCM). Overall, the SCM results reproduce the observed characteristics of the transitions in the near-surface inversion remarkably well. Using model output, the underlying mechanisms of the regime transitions are identified. The nonlinear relation between inversion strength and wind speed at a given level is explained by variations in the geostrophic wind speed, changes in the depth of the turbulent layer and the vertical divergence of turbulent fluxes. Moreover, the transitions between different boundary layer regimes cannot be explained without considering the contribution of subsidence heating. Atmospheric Remote Sensing Atmospheric Physics
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
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op_rights © 2019 P. Baas, B.J.H. van de Wiel, Erik van Meijgaard, Etienne Vignon, Christophe Genthon, S.J.A. van der Linden, S.R. de Roode
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spelling fttudelft:oai:tudelft.nl:uuid:57303df6-f894-426d-8e9c-5ee4daff65a5 2025-01-16T19:38:38+00:00 Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica Baas, P. (author) van de Wiel, B.J.H. (author) van Meijgaard, Erik (author) Vignon, Etienne (author) Genthon, Christophe (author) van der Linden, S.J.A. (author) de Roode, S.R. (author) 2019 http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:57303df6-f894-426d-8e9c-5ee4daff65a5 https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3450 en eng http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062701307&partnerID=8YFLogxK Royal Meteorological Society. Quarterly Journal (online)--0035-9009--e0f6ff8c-f42b-4d9c-9fb4-6d186d41bf0d http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:57303df6-f894-426d-8e9c-5ee4daff65a5 https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3450 © 2019 P. Baas, B.J.H. van de Wiel, Erik van Meijgaard, Etienne Vignon, Christophe Genthon, S.J.A. van der Linden, S.R. de Roode Antarctic atmosphere observational data analysis regime transition single-column model stable boundary layer journal article 2019 fttudelft https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3450 2024-04-09T23:45:06Z In this work we study the dynamics of the surface-based temperature inversion over the Antarctic Plateau during the polar winter. Using 6 years of observations from the French–Italian Antarctic station Concordia at Dome C, we investigate sudden regime transitions in the strength of the near-surface temperature inversion. Here we define “near-surface” as being within the domain of the 45-m measuring tower. In particular, we consider the strongly nonlinear relation between the 10-m inversion strength (T 10m – T s ) and the 10-m wind speed. To this end, all individual events for which the 10-m inversion strength increases or decreases continuously by more than 15 K in time are considered. Composite time series and vertical profiles of wind and temperature reveal specific characteristics of the transition from weak to very strong inversions and vice versa. In contrast to midlatitudes, the largest variations in temperature are not found at the surface but at a height of 10 m. A similar analysis was performed on results from an atmospheric single-column model (SCM). Overall, the SCM results reproduce the observed characteristics of the transitions in the near-surface inversion remarkably well. Using model output, the underlying mechanisms of the regime transitions are identified. The nonlinear relation between inversion strength and wind speed at a given level is explained by variations in the geostrophic wind speed, changes in the depth of the turbulent layer and the vertical divergence of turbulent fluxes. Moreover, the transitions between different boundary layer regimes cannot be explained without considering the contribution of subsidence heating. Atmospheric Remote Sensing Atmospheric Physics Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository Antarctic The Antarctic Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 145 720 930 946
spellingShingle Antarctic atmosphere
observational data analysis
regime transition
single-column model
stable boundary layer
Baas, P. (author)
van de Wiel, B.J.H. (author)
van Meijgaard, Erik (author)
Vignon, Etienne (author)
Genthon, Christophe (author)
van der Linden, S.J.A. (author)
de Roode, S.R. (author)
Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title_full Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title_fullStr Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title_short Transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at Dome C, Antarctica
title_sort transitions in the wintertime near-surface temperature inversion at dome c, antarctica
topic Antarctic atmosphere
observational data analysis
regime transition
single-column model
stable boundary layer
topic_facet Antarctic atmosphere
observational data analysis
regime transition
single-column model
stable boundary layer
url http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:57303df6-f894-426d-8e9c-5ee4daff65a5
https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3450